I'm not counting my chickens, they say it every year but nothing seems to happen. I remember the three year experiment in the late 80s/early 70s, I had hoped that it would be permanent but as far as I recall it was farmers who objected the most (cows must be cleverer than I thought if they know when the clocks change and automatically expect to be milked an hour later from that day), and the Scottish who were complaining (maybe arguably justifiably) about it still being dark well into the morning, regardless of the fact that at the moment it gets dark at about 3 in the afternoon in the north west.
Surely we in England do more business with the CET time zone (population 100s of millions) than Scotland (6 million) and I cannot believe I'm wrong in saying that many more people leave our shores to the south every day (and so have to put their watches forward an hour) than travel over the border into Scotland, so if the Scots objected, why not let them keep the time as it is now whilst putting the clocks forward an hour in Engalnd and Wales. (I assume that the Irish wouldn't want to change their time zone as they're further west, so the Scots would still have the same time zone as them).
It wouldn't be quite so bad keeping GMT/BST if we could put the clocks back in mid November and put them forward again say some time in February. At the moment its getting light at around 6am and dark at around 6.30 by the time they go forward at the end of March.